Today’s installment of campaign-related news items that wouldn’t generate a post of their own, but may be of interest to political observers: * Florida’s Republican presidential primary, which is tomorrow, is going down to the wire and John McCain and Mitt Romney are battling it out for first place. McCain may have gained a slight […]
There are 28 Democratic governors in the country, and about half of them have made presidential endorsements. In a couple of days, one of the more sought-after governors is going to back Barack Obama. Gov. Kathleen Sebelius (D-KS) will deliver the Democratic response to the State of the Union on Monday. And then Tuesday or […]
I realize that Republicans and campaign reporters continue to perceive John McCain as a credible person when it comes to matters of national security and military affairs — but that doesn’t make it sensible. John McCain says in almost every stump speech that he knows how to capture Osama bin Laden and that he’d follow […]
Clark Hoyt, the NYT’s public editor, recently explored the paper’s decision to hire Bill Kristol as a columnist, a move Hoyt described as a “mistake.” For his part, Kristol seems to be intent on proving Hoyt right. Kristol’s inaugural column, four weeks ago, went a long way in making his critics’ concerns look well grounded. […]
On Friday, the day before Barack Obama’s easy victory in South Carolina’s presidential primary, the NYT noted that the Clinton campaign had every intention to keep Bill Clinton in “attack mode.” Advisers to Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton say they have concluded that Bill Clinton’s aggressive politicking against Senator Barack Obama is resonating with voters, and […]
For a variety of reasons, it looks like the political world is far more interested in disputes surrounding Democratic presidential candidates, most notably Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. It’s not too big a mystery — the Dems are better candidates, with more interesting arguments, and with broader questions about race and gender that the media […]